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21 Journalism Ethics Stephen J. A. Ward Journalism ethics, the norms of responsible journalism, can be traced back to the beginning of modern journalism in Europe during the seventeenth century. This chapter provides an overview of contemporary journalism ethics by following its evolution, by reviewing and critiquing major approaches, and by suggesting future work. The chapter begins with a view of ethics as practi- cal normative activity that aims to solve problems, integrate values and help humans live rightly, as individuals and as societies. Journalism ethics is defi ned as a species of applied ethics that examines what journalists and news organizations should do, given their role in society. The main problem areas include editorial independence, verifi cation, anonymous sources, the use of graphic or altered images, and norms for new forms of media. The chapter identifi es fi ve stages in the development of journalism ethics and four approach- es to its study today. First, the invention of ethical discourse for journalism during the seventeenth century. Second, a “public ethics” as the creed for the growing newspaper press, or Fourth Estate, of the Enlightenment public sphere. Third, the liberal theory of the press, during the nineteenth century. Fourth, development and criticism of this liberal doctrine across the twentieth century resulting in a professional ethics of objective journalism, bolstered by social responsibility theo- ry; and an alternative ethics for interpretive and activist journalism. Fifth, today’s current “mixed media” ethics which lacks consensus on what principles apply across types of media. These stages are used to explain four approaches: (1) liberal theory, (2) objectivity and social responsi- bility theory, (3) interpretive theory, and (4) an ethics of community and care. The chapter then considers criticisms of current approaches by a range of disciplines, from critical and post-colonial theory to sociology of culture. The chapter concludes by arguing that the current media revolution and these new criticisms call for a fundamental re-thinking of jour- nalism ethics. Journalism ethics needs a richer theoretical base, a more adequate epistemology, and new norms for the multi-platform, global journalism of today and tomorrow. JOURNALISM ETHICS Ethics is the analysis, evaluation and promotion of what constitutes correct conduct and virtuous character in light of the best available principles. Ethics does not simply ask how to live well. It asks how we should live well ethically, that is, in goodness and in right relation with each other, a task that may require us to forego personal benefi ts, to carry out duties or to endure persecution. Ethical reasoning is about how people interpret, balance and modify their principles in light of new 295 WWahl-Jorg_C021.inddahl-Jorg_C021.indd 229595 88/21/2008/21/2008 99:53:17:53:17 AAMM 296 WARD facts, new technology, and new social conditions (Ward, 2007). The boundaries of ethics change. In our time, ethics has come to include such issues as animal cruelty, violence against women, the environment and the rights of homosexuals (Glover, 1999). Ethical refl ection is normative reason in social practice. Ethics is the never-completed project of inventing, applying and critiquing the principles that guide human interaction, defi ne social roles and justify institutional structures. Therefore, ethics, especially journalism ethics, is essentially a practical activity (Black, Steele, & Barney, 1999) that seeks reasons to questions of how to act. Is it ethical for journalists to reveal their confi dential sources to police? Is it ethical to invade the privacy of a much-admired politician to investigate alleged misconduct? Ethics includes the theoretical study of the concepts and modes of justifi cation that provide ethical reasons for acting. But the purpose here is also practical: to clarify principles and improve deliberation so as to lead to well-considered ethical judgments. A stress on the practical in ethics assures us that “the problems we have followed into the clouds are, even intellectually, genuine not spurious” (Dworkin, 2000, p. 4). Journalism Ethics as Applied Applied ethics is the study of frameworks of principles for domains of activity, such as corporate governance, scientifi c research and professional practice (Dimock & Tucker, 2004). Journalism ethics is a species of applied media ethics that investigates the “micro” problems of what individ- ual journalists should do in particular situations, and the “macro” problems of what news media should do, given their role in society. Journalists as members of news organizations have rights, duties and norms because as human beings, they fall under general ethical principles such as to tell the truth and minimize harm, and because as professionals they have social power to frame the political agenda and infl uence public opinion (Curd & May, 1984; Elliott, 1986). Therefore, a question about journalism is an ethical question, as opposed to a question of prudence, custom or law, if it evaluates conduct in light of the fundamental public purposes and social responsibilities of journalism. A story that sensationalizes the personal life of a public fi gure may be legal—it may be legally “safe” to publish—but it may be unethical in being inac- curate and unfair. However, there is no necessary incompatibility between ethical values and other types of value. A story may be well-written, legal and career-enhancing, yet also ethical. What one regards as a question of journalism ethics depends, ultimately, on one’s conception of the primary functions of journalism and the principles that promote those aims. Consequently, there is room for disagreement on the level of practice, in applying norms, and on the level of theory and principle. Problem Areas A major task of journalism ethics is to determine how existing norms apply to the main ethical issues of the day. Some current problem areas are: • Accuracy and verifi cation: How much verifi cation and context is required to publish a story? How much editing and “gate-keeping” is necessary? • Independence and allegiances: How can journalists be independent but maintain ethical relations with their employers, editors, advertisers, sources, police and the public. When is a journalist too close to a source, or in a confl ict of interest? • Deception and fabrication: Should journalists misrepresent themselves or use recording technology, such as hidden cameras, to get a story? Should literary journalists invent dia- logue or create composite “characters”? WWahl-Jorg_C021.inddahl-Jorg_C021.indd 229696 88/21/2008/21/2008 99:53:21:53:21 AAMM 21. JOURNALISM ETHICS 297 • Graphic images and image manipulation: When should journalists publish graphic or gruesome images? When do published images constitute sensationalism or exploitation? When and how should images be altered? • Sources and confi dentiality: Should journalists promise confi dentiality to sources? How far does that protection extend? Should journalists go “off the record”? • Special situations: How should journalists report hostage-takings, major breaking news, suicide attempts and other events where coverage could exacerbate the problem? When should journalists violate privacy? • Ethics across media types: Do the norms of mainstream print and broadcast journalism apply to journalism on the Internet? To citizen journalists? MAIN APPROACHES The history of journalism ethics can be divided into fi ve stages. The fi rst stage is the invention of an ethical discourse for journalism as it emerged in Western Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Gutenberg’s press in the mid-fi fteenth century gave birth to printer-editors who created a periodic news press of “newssheets” and “newsbooks” under state control. Despite the primitive nature of their newsgathering, and the partisan nature of their times, editors assured readers that they printed the impartial truth based on “matters of fact.” The second stage was the creation of a “public ethic” as the creed for the growing newspaper press of the Enlightenment public sphere. Journalists claimed to be tribunes of the public, protecting their liberty against government. They advocated reform and eventually revolution. By the end of the eighteenth century, the press was a socially recognized institution, a power to be praised or feared, with guarantees of freedom in the post-revolution constitutions of America and France. This public ethic was the basis for the idea of a Fourth Estate—the press as one of the governing institutions of society (Ward, 2005a, pp. 89–173). The third stage was the evolution of the idea of a Fourth Estate into the liberal theory of the press, during the nineteenth century (Siebert, 1956). Liberal theory began with the premise that a free and independent press was necessary for the protection of the liberties of the public and the promotion of liberal reform. The fourth stage was the simultaneous development and criticism of this liberal doctrine across the twentieth century. Both the development and the criticism were responses to defi ciencies in the liberal model. The “developers” were journalists and ethicists who constructed a professional ethics of objective journalism, bolstered by social responsibil- ity theory. Objectivism sought to use adherence to fact and impartiality towards political party to restrain a free press that was increasingly sensational (or “yellow”) and dominated by busi- ness interests (Baldasty, 1992;
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